CALENDERED WIRE CLOTH.
Wire cloth that has passed through a pair of heavy rollers to reduce the
thickness of the fabric, or to flatten the intersection to provide a smooth
surface.
CLEAR OPENING (also
Space). Space
between adjacent parallel wires.
OPENING (Space). Clear opening between adjacent parallel wires; Not
affected by diameter of the wire.

COUNT (also Mesh). Number
of openings in a linear inch.
CRIMP. Corrugations
in wires to permit locking them into place when perpendicular to each other.
DOUBLE CRIMP. Wire
pre-crimped prior to weaving; Warp and shute wires lay in each crimp.
DOUBLE INTERMEDIATE
CRIMP. Usually the
warp wires lay in every crimp in the shute wires, and the shute wires lay in
every crimp in the warp wires.
FILL WIRES (also Shute
Wires). Wires running
across the width of the cloth as woven.
GAUGE. Wire size. To
avoid possible errors, specify wire diameter in decimal sizes rather
than gauge numbers.
INTERMEDIATE CRIMP. Warp
and shute wires lay in every other crimp.
LONG SLOT. Weave
where shute wires are arranged in clusters to provide rectangular openings.
MARKET GRADES. Most
commonly used sizes of industrial wire cloth specifications selected for
general purpose work.
MESH. Number of openings in a linear inch measured from the center of one wire
to a point 1" distant.

MICRONIC MESH. A
woven filter cloth with a nominal micron rating as low as 2.0 with excellent
flow characteristics.
OPEN AREA. The
proportion of open space in a total screen area; Expressed as a
percentage.
PLAIN WEAVE. Each
warp wire and shute pass over one and under the next adjacent wire; Wires are
crimped in the weaving operation.
PLAIN DUTCH WEAVE.
Warp wires are generally larger than the shute wires. Shute wires are closely
spaced to provide a dense weave with wedge shaped openings.
RECTANGULAR OPENINGS.
Long dimension of an opening can be specified as parallel or perpendicular to
the length.
REVERSE DUTCH WEAVE.
Woven in which the larger count of wires is found in the warp and the smaller
count in the shute, thus reversing the method used in plain and twilled Dutch
weaves.
SELVAGE.
Finished edges running the length of the roll to prevent unraveling.
SHUTE WIRES. Wires
running across the width of the cloth as woven.
SQUARE MESH. Wire
cloth with mesh count the same in both directions.
TWILLED WEAVE. Each
warp wire and each shute wire pass successively over two and under the next
adjacent pair of wires.
TWILLED DUTCH DOUBLE
WEAVE. Same as
twilled Dutch except the shute wires are smaller and overlap, thus increasing
the number of shute wires in a linear inch to provide greater density.
WARP WIRES. Wires
running the length of the cloth as woven.
WELDED WIRE CLOTH. Warp
and shute wires lay flat (no crimp); Welded at intersections.




Precrimping
assures maximum rigidity with
close tolerance mesh openings in accordance
with customer specifications